The ionizing continuum from active galactic nuclei is fundamental for interpreting their broad emission lines and understanding their impact on the surrounding gas. Furthermore, it provides hints on how matter accretes on to supermassive black holes. Using Hubble Space Telescope's Wide Field Camera 3, we have constructed the first stacked ultraviolet (rest-frame wavelengths 600-2500 Å) spectrum of 53 luminous quasars at z ≃ 2.4, with a state-of-the-art correction for the intervening Lyman forest and Lyman continuum absorption. The continuum slope (f_ν ∝ ν ^{α _ν }) of the full sample shows a break at ̃912 Å with spectral index αν = -0.61 ± 0.01 at λ > 912 Å and a softening at shorter wavelengths (αν = -1.70 ± 0.61 at λ ≤ 912 Å). Our analysis proves that a proper intergalactic medium absorption correction is required to establish the intrinsic continuum emission of quasars. We interpret our average ultraviolet spectrum in the context of photoionization, accretion disc models, and quasar contribution to the ultraviolet background. We find that observed broad line ratios are consistent with those predicted assuming an ionizing slope of αion = -2.0, similar to the observed ionizing spectrum in the same wavelength range. The continuum break and softening are consistent with accretion disc plus X-ray corona models when black hole spin is taken into account. Our spectral energy distribution yields a 30 per cent increase to previous estimates of the specific quasar emissivity, such that quasars may contribute significantly to the total specific Lyman limit emissivity estimated from the Lyα forest at z < 3.2.

The first ultraviolet quasar-stacked spectrum at z ≃ 2.4 from WFC3 / Lusso, E.; Worseck, G.; Hennawi, J.F.; Prochaska, J.X.; Vignali, C.; Stern, J.; O'Meara, J.M.. - In: MONTHLY NOTICES OF THE ROYAL ASTRONOMICAL SOCIETY. - ISSN 0035-8711. - ELETTRONICO. - 449:(2015), pp. 4204-4220. [10.1093/mnras/stv516]

The first ultraviolet quasar-stacked spectrum at z ≃ 2.4 from WFC3

Lusso, E.
;
Vignali, C.;
2015

Abstract

The ionizing continuum from active galactic nuclei is fundamental for interpreting their broad emission lines and understanding their impact on the surrounding gas. Furthermore, it provides hints on how matter accretes on to supermassive black holes. Using Hubble Space Telescope's Wide Field Camera 3, we have constructed the first stacked ultraviolet (rest-frame wavelengths 600-2500 Å) spectrum of 53 luminous quasars at z ≃ 2.4, with a state-of-the-art correction for the intervening Lyman forest and Lyman continuum absorption. The continuum slope (f_ν ∝ ν ^{α _ν }) of the full sample shows a break at ̃912 Å with spectral index αν = -0.61 ± 0.01 at λ > 912 Å and a softening at shorter wavelengths (αν = -1.70 ± 0.61 at λ ≤ 912 Å). Our analysis proves that a proper intergalactic medium absorption correction is required to establish the intrinsic continuum emission of quasars. We interpret our average ultraviolet spectrum in the context of photoionization, accretion disc models, and quasar contribution to the ultraviolet background. We find that observed broad line ratios are consistent with those predicted assuming an ionizing slope of αion = -2.0, similar to the observed ionizing spectrum in the same wavelength range. The continuum break and softening are consistent with accretion disc plus X-ray corona models when black hole spin is taken into account. Our spectral energy distribution yields a 30 per cent increase to previous estimates of the specific quasar emissivity, such that quasars may contribute significantly to the total specific Lyman limit emissivity estimated from the Lyα forest at z < 3.2.
2015
449
4204
4220
Lusso, E.; Worseck, G.; Hennawi, J.F.; Prochaska, J.X.; Vignali, C.; Stern, J.; O'Meara, J.M.
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Utilizza questo identificatore per citare o creare un link a questa risorsa: https://hdl.handle.net/2158/1155460
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